Trust Me (Millais painting)
| Trust Me | |
|---|---|
| Artist | John Everett Millais |
| Year | 1860–62 |
| Type | Oil painting |
| Location | Private collection |
Trust Me is an 1860–62 oil painting by the English artist John Everett Millais. It shows a young woman holding a letter behind her back facing an older man who has his hand out to her, as if to ask for or receive the letter.
The painting
Millais commenced work on Trust Me, together with his painting The Ransom, in the autumn of 1860.[1]
The painting is of a genre of Victorian painting that became to be known as a problem picture, characterised by the deliberately ambiguous depiction of a key moment in a narrative that can be interpreted in several different ways, or which portrays an unresolved dilemma:
[Trust Me] shows a moment's interaction between a well-dressed woman and an older man, who is in hunting pink and holding a riding-crop. She is holding what appears to be a letter behind her back, while he is holding out his hand as to receive it. One character is saying to the other 'Trust me', yet it is not apparent who is speaking. Is the man saying that he can be trusted to read the letter, or is the woman saying that he can be confident that she has nothing to hide from him? We have no idea what their relationship might be, older husband and younger wife, or father and daughter, legal guardian and ward - the possibilities are numerous.[2]
The painting hung in the Royal Academy Exhibition of 1862, catalogue number 269, along with Millais' The Ransom.[3]
The painting was owned by American businessman Malcolm Forbes, and was due to be sold in a posthumous auction by Christie's of his art collection in spring 2003.[4] However, it did not appear in Christie's "The Forbes Collection of Victorian Pictures and Works of Art" auction of 19-20 February 2003, so presumably had been sold privately before this.[5] The painting's current owner and location is not in public record.
See also
References
- ^ The Life and Letters of John Everett Millais 1899, Millais, John Guille, London: Methuen, vol. 1, p. 365. [1]
- ^ Transforming Anthony Trollope: Dispossession, Victorianism and Nineteenth-Century Word and Image (Studies in European Comics and Graphic Novels, 4), eds Simon Grennan & Laurence Grove, Leuven University Press 2015, page 98.
- ^ The exhibition of the Royal Academy of Arts. MDCCCLXII. (1862). The ninety-fourth. London: Royal Academy of Arts. 1862. p. 15. Retrieved 18 December 2025.
- ^ Kennedy, Maev (18 October 2002). "Tycoon's Victorian treasury for sale". The Guardian. Retrieved 19 December 2025.
- ^ "The Forbes Collection of Victorian Pictures and Works of Art". Christie's. Retrieved 19 December 2025.